IRRIGATION WITH BRACKISH-WATER UNDER DESERT CONDITIONS .11. SALT TOLERANCE IN SWEET-CORN CULTIVARS

Citation
D. Pasternak et al., IRRIGATION WITH BRACKISH-WATER UNDER DESERT CONDITIONS .11. SALT TOLERANCE IN SWEET-CORN CULTIVARS, Agricultural water management, 28(4), 1995, pp. 325-334
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Water Resources",Agriculture
ISSN journal
03783774
Volume
28
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
325 - 334
Database
ISI
SICI code
0378-3774(1995)28:4<325:IWBUDC>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
The salt tolerance of 14 sweet corn (Zea mays L.) cultivars differing in days for silking and days for grain filling was evaluated under fie ld conditions in an arid environment. Plants were drip irrigated with fresh (EC(i) = 1.2 dS m(-1)) and brackish (EC(i) = 6.2 dS m(-1)) water . Brackish water irrigation started 20 days after planting following t he application of 100 mm of fresh water. There were large intraspecifi c variations in absolute yield and in salt tolerance (expressed as the ratio of brackish water yield to fresh water yield). The cultivar N.K Rogers 2572 had, under saline conditions, both the highest absolute e ar yield (18.1 kg per 10 m(2)) and the highest relative ear yield (82% ). Salinity affected all major yield parameters (number of ears per un it area, number of kernels per ear and kernel weight). Ear number was more affected than other parameters. Results indicate that early flowe ring cultivars are, under the irrigation regime employed in the trial, more salt tolerant than late flowering cultivars. Salinity had an inc onsistent effect on kernel quality parameters. In some cultivars it in creased soluble carbohydrates and sucrose contents, while in others th ese parameters were reduced.